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Tag: Matango

Jimmy’s Notes on ‘Episode 27: Frankenstein Conquers the World (feat. Travis Alexander)’

First, let me apologize to the Patrons because I didn’t get this finished in time for early access. You see, I was tasked by the Board of Directors with caretaking for the Matango while Dr. Douriff was on sabbatical for Halloween weekend, and I had…a weird experience that left me in the Monster Island Infirmary. Then, as announced by the Board on Twitter, I was given a clean bill of health but told to take a paid week off work. Normally, I’d probably come into the studio anyway, but I got used to spending the extra time in my garage working on Mechani-Kong Mk. 2 with Jet Jaguar. That knocked me out of my normal routine, so this didn’t get written in time for Patrons. That shouldn’t be an issue going forward.

As usual, with this being a shorter episode and derived from Nathan’s grad school research paper, I don’t have a lot in my notes. Regardless, let’s get into them.

My Notes:

  • Is it “Bar-a-gon” or “bare-a-gon,” Nathan? Pronunciations!
  • Nathan forgot to mention Frankenberry cereal when he said he would bring it up in an episode I don’t feel like talking about.
  • Was there a gremlin in Travis’s mic? It bugged out a few times. Did Goji-kun and Bro Kong return from fighting COVID-19 yet?
  • Actually, Frankenstein has been translated into Japanese six times, and two of those were before this film was released (1953 and 1959).
  • Can you blame me for crushing on Kumi Mizuno? I mean, look at her!
  • I might have to buy one of Travis’s T-shirts. Nathan already has one.
  • Yeah, I still don’t allow bearskin rugs into my apartment. And only recently did I let Chewbacca toys in. Because this thing.

Nathan’s Leftover Notes:

  • Un-subtitled German later. Indiana Jones-style map sequence. Japanese officers suggests the Germans are giving them Hitler. Implies he wasn’t dead but was hiding. (He’s dead. No boys from Brazil here. –Jimmy)
  • 15 years later, Dr. Bowen is working to treat radiation victims in Hiroshima. Treats dying child whose parents died in A-bomb. “The story of Hiroshima is too tragic. But it’s also a fact that is has given us the opportunity to study the cellular tissues of the human body. We must work to turn tragedy into eternal peace and happiness in the future.” (Nick Adams is awesome. –Jimmy)
  • Dr. Bowen: “…I came here after the war, because I was one of the people concerned about the A-bomb that was dropped on Hiroshima. I wanted to spend my life rehabilitating mankind, not in destroying it. But the more research work I do, the more I am troubled by my doubts. So I’m thinking of returning to America to start all over again.” (Nick Adams is still awesome. –Jimmy)
  • Like in King Kong, the feminine presence calms the savage.
  • A reporter asks if the boy was born after the war, but Bowen dodges it. (Like a boss! –Jimmy)
  • Minor character says he wouldn’t be surprised if a boy like Frankenstein was born after thousands of people died in bombings.
  • Baragon teased 23 minutes or so in.
  • Frankenstein is violent but also curious. He smashes a TV but won’t hurt Sueko. Goes for her necklace when it seemed he would attack her.
  • Is Frankenstein human? Some say he isn’t because he was manmade or acts savage. Put him in a zoo. Cut off his limbs to test if he is because he’s not a human being. Like Hibakusha.
  • Why is he is growing gigantic now in a short time and not during the 15 years he was in the city? (Because reasons. –Jimmy)
  • Like King Kong, he’s set off by lights.
  • Interestingly, Frankenstein never eats people. (Unlike his “son.” –Jimmy)
  • Frankenstein isn’t filmed like kaiju. He lacks the illusion of size because his footage wasn’t slowed down.
  • It’s Thing! 😛 (Which “Thing”? There are several. –Jimmy)
  • How and why did the severed hand shrink?
  • Where does Frankenstein find clothes that fit him? (From Kaiju Weekly’s Tee Public store, of course! –Jimmy)
  • The miniature work is still pretty effective.
  • This is a road/travel movie with all of these locations! Another map sequence.
  • Dr. Bowen is somewhat like Dr. Yamane in saying Frankie shouldn’t be killed.
  • This story is like the Universal film in that Frankie is a misunderstood monster who is tragically killed.
  • Baragon finally appears 56 minutes in. He seems to initially be filmed like proper kaiju.
  • Kimura’s reporters don’t believe the story of an innocent Frankie and the evil dinosaur. Even seem callous. Laugh it off. Unlike Sekizawa’s reporters.
  • At least two pieces of music in this film were recycled in Godzilla vs. Gigan.
  • If you want to kill him, capture him and starve him of protein. The hand died. (For the record, he isn’t treated like this on Monster Island. –Jimmy)
  • The noise Frankenstein makes at the end—the sorta scream—is a bit annoying.
  • Now Baragon is moving too quickly. It’s like Godzilla Raids Again.
  • Frankie has some nasty fangs.
  • Sequel baits at the end. (Only in the alternate ending—which does kinda payoff.. –Jimmy)

That’s all for today.

Join us next week when Nathan is joined once again by his friend Nick Hayden. This time they discuss the first Ray Harryhausen film covered on MIFV, The Beast from 20,000 Fathoms. Then later this month Nathan will be visited by Sci-Fi Japan writer Ben Chaffins to talk about this film’s pseudo-sequel, War of the Gargantuas.

Now, if you’ll excuse me, that robot monkey is calling.

Follow me on Twitter: @NasaJimmy

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Jimmy’s Notes on ‘Episode 21: Matango (Mini-Analysis)’

It’s been a rough week on Monster Island, what with the Board of Directors mandating masks (again). I’m a big fan of them hiring Douglas Gordon as the Island’s security chief, though. Plus, the Board is sharing some…inside info with me you may hear on a future episode.

Anyway, I only have a few of my own notes plus Nathan’s notes from his independent study for this week’s blog. I think he only has a few more of the films from that study left. Atragon and Frankie v. Barry, I think. Regardless, I have some snark to deliver.

  • It’s “Ghost in the Shell,” Nathan, not “Ghost in a Shell.” Direct vs. indirect articles. Big difference, as you know.
  • Trust me when I say some things in Tokyo will follow you everywhere. At least for a while. And I don’t mean puppies.
  • Birds get sucked into jet engines a lot, man. We pilots do have our own superstitions. Canada geese are the worst offenders. (Sorry, Chris Cooke).
  • To learn more about Hahajima, which has the big mountain Dd G told us about, click here. Let me tell you, it is a beautiful place. Nathan, Jet Jaguar, and I will be taking a hike there soon.
  • If you’re curious about the DC Comics villain Matango, read this.

Here are Nathan’s leftover notes:

  • Kubo’s face is seen. He’s unscarred. (Which makes the ending that much more interesting. –Jimmy)
  • Music during credits is weirdly upbeat.
  • “Tokyo and all her dust.” Men and money are left behind.
  • Writer loses his pages in water. I’d be upset. But he thinks writers steal everything. (You would know better than me, Nathan. –Jimmy)
  • “Top lady” = mistress (and double entendre?) (Yep. –Jimmy)
  • 40 million yen yacht. Best that money can buy. Destroyed by storm.
  • Scare girls and then treat them tender. “That’s not psychology—that’s a paperback novel!” (One of the best lines in the film! –Jimmy)
  • Professor is a psychologist. Appropriate and ironic.
  • The women are polar opposites. Mami (Mizuno) is a flirtatious harlot while Akiko is a chaste, shy girl who’s never been kissed.
  • 7 characters for the 7 deadly sins. (You can thank Danny DiManna for that idea. I still can’t figure out which character is which sin, though. Maybe Rev. Mifune could help explain?  –Jimmy)
  • Music is somewhat minimalistic for the most part. Not Ifukube or Sato. (It was Sadao Bekku. –Jimmy)
  • The hallucinations begin before they reach the island with the phantom ship. Perhaps an indication that Yoshida is already unhinged.
  • Fog is a common motif. It obscures. It clouds. Drug reference?
  • This film is Lost meets Gilligan’s Island with a Twilight Zone ending.
  • The set design for the ship is great. The mold everywhere. Unique. Like a haunted house. Reminiscent of classic Universal horror.
  • Is it possible this whole film is Akira Kubo’s fever dream? How much of it is true? There are things that don’t add up. (Given what we heard from Dr. Dourif, I’m pretty sure it was real. –Jimmy)
  • The mold is great foreshadowing for Matango.
  • Eyeless turtle: foreboding.
  • Matnago is said to be a radiation mutant. Anti-nuclear. Doesn’t explain everything.
  • Nationality of boat concealed. Communist and western. Even Japan. Humanity represented. No one is innocent.
  • Matango is the forbidden fruit. May eat everything else but that.
  • Plays on natural need—eating—and makes it scary. Do it and suffer. Much like Nightmare on Elm Street with sleeping. (“Never eat again…”. –Jimmy)
  • The location photography is amazing.
  • Is this island attracting boats to it and sinking them? Bermuda Triangle?
  • First Matango appears almost 43 minutes in.
  • Two characters fire at Matango but not sure they hit it or saw anything but audience sees mushroom goo on ground.
  • This film was almost banned because of the mushroom man make-up. Looked like bombing victims. (The Hibakusha, which we’ll be discussing in a future episode. –Jimmy)
  • Even the characters think they saw ghosts—but there are footprints.
  • Illustrates why William Golding had no girls in Lord of the Flies: aggravates things. Aggravates men. Unlike that story, they are just as corruptible. (To hear his full reasoning from the foreword to his book, watch this video. –Jimmy)
  • “Akiko…this is Mother.” (Clearly that was the mushrooms talking. Those lying Matango! –Jimmy)
  • Yoshida says frayed nerves make people see witches and devils. Tries to explain strange happenings away. (That just sounds like trick-or-treaters at Halloween. –Jimmy)
  • Yoshida and Mami have a full-on make-out session. Most sexual thing in a Honda film.
  • Koyama pulls rope as he falls. Lifeline. Symbolic. Body has bills strewn about him. Also symbolic. Died amassing useless wealth.
  • Mami’s wardrobe changes to reflect her allegiance. Green and plantlike.
  • One character eats Matango and has vision of dancing showgirls amid Tokyo neon. Drugs. Revelry. Opulence.
  • The Matango laugh was recycled later for Baltan on Ultraman. (And it’s just as disturbing coming from those big beetles! –Jimmy)
  • Sakuta runs, but he eventually jumps overboard. Then writes on wall that everyone else is dead. Betrayal.
  • The professor and Akiko decide to leave. Almost happy ending. Then mushroom people show up. Like a zombie movie. Night of the Living Dead? Hacks off an arm. (Maybe George Romero saw this movie? –Jimmy)
  • Seems a little convenient that he leaves on boat and gets found. Why take him to psychiatric ward?
  • Doctor says, “We are grateful that you were able to come back.” Are they speaking of him as a patient? (Another parallel to The Cabinet of Dr. Caligari. –Jimmy)
  • (In “The Voice in the Night,”) John and his fiancée are like the prof and student in the film: innocent but they succumb to temptation. And are corrupted spiritually and physically. (Read more about this story here. –Jimmy)

That does it for my notes this week.

Join us next Wednesday to hear the start of the “Daimajin Days” when Nathan’s friends Joe and Joy Metter returned to start their journey through the Daimajin trilogy. Then this month’s mini-analysis will be on Ishiro Honda’s other 1963 classic, Atragon.

As the Board says, “Together we can find a better way forward.”

Follow me on Twitter: @NasaJimmy

Follow the Board on Twitter: @MonsterIslaBOD

#JimmyFromNASALives
#WeShallOvercome

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Episode 21: ‘Matango’ (Mini-Analysis)

Hello, kaiju lovers!

An artsy Japanese horror film about mushrooms based on a British short story?

That’s sounds insane enough to work!

Despite getting slapped with the schlocky English title, “Attack of the Mushroom People,” Matango ranks as one of director Ishiro Honda’s greatest achievements in tokustasu filmmaking. Screenwriter Takeshi Kimura considered it to be his magnum opus. It’s a story replete with subtlety and symbolism, an indictment of Japan’s newfound opulence and decadence in the early 1960s, and it’s as relevant now for any audience as it was back then. It’s such an important film, Nathan and his intrepid producer, Jimmy From NASA, interview the only scientist on Monster Island’s who’s brave and/or crazy enough to study the Matango—with frightening results! 

Featuring Daniel DiManna as the voice of Dr. Dante Dourif.

Episode image created by Michael Hamilton. Check out his podcast, The Kaiju Groupie.

This is meant to supplement this episode of Kaijuvision Radio: Episode 45: Matango (Attack of the Mushroom People) (1963) (Westernization and Globalization)

We’d like to give a shout-out to our Patreon patrons Travis Alexander and Michael Hamilton (cohosts of Kaiju Weekly); Danny DiManna (Godzilla Novelization Project); elizilla13; and Chris Cooke (host of One Cross Radio)! Thanks for your support!

You, too, can support us on Patreon!

This episode is approved by the Monster Island Board of Directors.

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© 2020 Nathan Marchand & Moonlighting Ninjas Media

Bibliography/Further Reading:

  • “Attack of the Mushroom People: Ishiro Honda’s Matango William Hope Hodgson’s ‘The Voice in the Night’” by Anthony Camara (Monsters and Monstrosity from the Fin de Siécle to the Millennium, edited by Sharla Hutchinson and Rebecca A. Brown)
  • “The history and current state of drug abuse in Japan” by Kiyoshi Wada (Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences, Jan 2011, vol. 1216, no. 1, p 62-72)
  • Ishiro Honda: A Life in Film, from Godzilla to Kurosawa by Steve Ryfle and Ed Godzisewski
  • “Ishiro Honda-thon Ep. 5: Matango (1963) Review” by Adam Noyes (AN Productions) (YouTube)
  • Kaijuvision Radio, “Episode 8: King Kong vs. Godzilla (1962)”
  • “Methamphetamine Solution: Drugs and the Reconstruction of Nation in Postwar Japan” by Miriam Kingsburg (The Journal of Asian Studies, Feb. 2013, vol. 72, no. 1, p. 141-162)
  • Mushroom Clouds and Mushroom Men: The Fantastic Cinema of Ishiro Honda by Peter H. Brothers
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